50 - the sopa awards · noida, greater noida; at mathura, the gokul barrage robs it of more water...
TRANSCRIPT
CLEAR, BLUE AND SPARKLINGThe Yamuna springs from the pure meltwaters of the Yamunotri glacier on the Banderpooch peaks in the Lower Himalayas in Uttarkashi, Uttarakhand
MINING ON RIVERBANK A canal meets the river 20 km downstream at Paonta Sahib, a Sikh pilgrimage site and an industrial town; stone and sand mining goes on at the riverbank, in open defiance of Supreme Court directives
UNFIT FOR ANY USE The Yamuna gets all the waste from Ghaziabad, Noida, Greater Noida; at Mathura, the Gokul barrage robs it of more water while the Masani nullah empties more waste: remains of ghats, cremation grounds, industrial chemicals
MOST POLLUTED STRETCH Nearly untreated water from 17
drains in UP, the water turns poisonous from here, full of
filth, microbes, heavy metals, arsenic, residual ash and coal
WORST POLLUTERS Open burning of trash by the Agra municipality; burning of scrap tyres to extract iron; wood-burning crematoriums; forest fires; chullahs—in homes and small-scale industries; on-road and off-road diesel engines; industrial emission
DEADLY PARTICLESOpen burning of waste
and diesel fumes release tiny carbon par ticles that stick to the marble. They
are insoluble in water and hard to remove. The only way to reduce emissions
is to identify and eliminate the sources of pollution
BROWN CARBONSolid waste from animal and crop sources; meat
processing waste; leather tanning waste;
stubble burning in nearby states: these are
the biggest sources of hazard ous brown
carbon in the air, Agra’s enduring bane
SAND IN THE AIR Dust particles, mostly
from the Rajasthan deserts, and illegal
sand mining, increase the level of suspended
particulate matter in the air. Sand particles
also abrade the marble
RIVER DIVERTED A series of conduits,
and drainage pipes encased in stone and
mortar built in to divert the river water
METRIC TONNES of waste is
dumped in the open in Agra city
every day
TIMES MORE BIOCHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD) than the
permissible limit, by the time the Yamuna flows
through Agra; indicates very high levels of pollution,
which promotes the proliferation of harmful
insects and microbes
PER CENTOr less is Agra’s green cover now, against the
national goal of 33%
WOOD BASE GOES BRITTLE
The wooden parts need to be moist, to retain flexibility and strength. With the
Yamuna receding, it’s feared the logs and boards have become brittle and that the
Taj might cave in
WELL FOUNDATION The Taj is built on
gigantic wooden slabs atop a well foundation,
to stabilise the river-bank sand. Rows of
columns and archways keep it from sliding
into the river
UNKNOWN DEPTHS Caissons, or watertight
hollow cylinders, cased in ebony or mahogany, and
filled with rubble and masonry, extend deep
into the river bed
DISCOLOURING THE TAJScientists have found that tiny dust particles, black carbon (soot) and brown organic carbon are sticking to the Taj surface. They absorb ultraviolet light, giving the white marble a dirty brown hue
0 MG/ L OF DISSOLVED OXYGEN
at a few locations near Agra. Healthy rivers should contain at least 5 mg/ L for
marine life to thrive
POISONOUS WATERSThe Yamuna behind the Taj is
greyish-black, smells of rotten eggs, marked by
blooming algae and dead fish
CHOKED TO DEATHIllegal sand mining and construction in the Yamuna floodplain—the water is dark, slimy, with negligible flow
WATER VOLUME THE YAMUNA LOSESAfter diversion into two canals for dri nking and irrigation. The river is reduced to a trickle at the Hathni-kund dam in Haryana. From this point, it is fed by untreated sewers. The stench is unbearable
ECOLOGICALLY DEADBetween Panipat and Agra, the river is black and stinking, with municipal, domestic and industrial waste pouring into it from 22 drains in Haryana, 42 in Delhi and 17 in Uttar Pradesh
CAPITAL CALAMITY
Delhi drains out almost all the water,
dumps 80% of its solid waste into the river between Palla, Wazirabad, ITO and
Okhla barrages
IT’S A SEWERAt Agra, it’s no longer a river, but a sewer; with 630 MLD of untreated municipal sewage dumped every day, floating filth, plastic, tannery waste, cadavers and carcasses, toxic metal discharge from industry...
FIRST INTERVENTION The Yamuna enters the plains at Dakpathar, Uttarakhand. A weir, 3 hydel plants and a tourist complex destroy fish, turtles and water birds
Is the Taj Doomed?
A RIVER FULL OF SORROW
A TOXIC NEIGHBOURHOOD
FOUNDATION FEARS
The Taj Mahal is in grave danger. While air pollution is turning the monument brown, severe degradation of the Yamuna is likely to ruin its foundation. If not tackled on a war footing, India’s only ‘Wonder of the World’ may one day become a rotting remnant of the
glory that was. Or worse, it may just slide off its pedestal into the mud
PER CENTMunicipal waste is
burnt on the roadside, releasing particulate matter
24 02
99%
2,000
50
9
02
02
Infographics by NILANJAN DAS
* Artist’s impression
GREEN MARBLE Chironomid insects emerge from the water at night and
swarm the monument, staining it green